Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe

Every year river floods cause enormous damage around the world. Recent major floods in North America and Europe, for example, have received much press, with some concluding that these floods are more frequent in recent years as a result of anthropogenic warming. There has been considerable scientifi...

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Main Authors: Hodgkins, G.A, Whitfield, P.H., Burn, D.H., Hannaford, J., Renard, B., Stahl, K., Fleig, A.K., Madsen, H., Mediero, L., Korhonen, J., Murphy, C., Crochet, P., Wilson, D.
Other Authors: US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY AUGUSTA USA, ENVIRONMENT CANADA VANCOUVER CAN, UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO ONTARIO CAN, CENTRE FOR ECOLOGY AND HYDROLOGY WALLINGFORD GBR, IRSTEA LYON UR HHLY FRA, UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG DEU, NORWEGIAN WATER RESOURCES AND ENERGY DIRECTORATE OSLO NOR, DHI HORSHOLM DNK, TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MADRID ESP, FINNISH ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTE HELSINKI FIN, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND MAYNOOTH IRL, ICELANDIC METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE REYKJAVIK ISL
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Soi
Online Access:https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00052220
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institution Open Polar
collection Irstea Publications et Bases documentaires (Irstea@doc/CemOA)
op_collection_id ftcemoa
language English
topic INONDATION
TENDANCE
CLIMAT
flooding
trends
climate
spellingShingle INONDATION
TENDANCE
CLIMAT
flooding
trends
climate
Hodgkins, G.A
Whitfield, P.H.
Burn, D.H.
Hannaford, J.
Renard, B.
Stahl, K.
Fleig, A.K.
Madsen, H.
Mediero, L.
Korhonen, J.
Murphy, C.
Crochet, P.
Wilson, D.
Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe
topic_facet INONDATION
TENDANCE
CLIMAT
flooding
trends
climate
description Every year river floods cause enormous damage around the world. Recent major floods in North America and Europe, for example, have received much press, with some concluding that these floods are more frequent in recent years as a result of anthropogenic warming. There has been considerable scientific effort invested in establishing whether observed flood records show evidence of trends or variability in flood frequency, and to determine whether these patterns can be linked to climatic changes. However, the river catchments used in many published studies are influenced by direct human alteration such as reservoir regulation and urbanisation, which can confound the interpretation of climate-driven variability. Furthermore, a majority of previous studies have analysed changes in low magnitude floods, such as the annual peak flow, at a national scale. Few studies are known that have analysed changes in large floods (greater than 25-year floods) on a continental scale. To fill this research gap, we present a study analysing flood flows from reference hydrologic networks (RHNs) or RHN-like gauges across a large study domain embracing North America and much of Europe. RHNs comprise gauging stations with minimally disturbed catchment conditions, which have a near-natural flow regime and provide good quality data; RHN analyses thus allow hydro-climatic variability to be distinguished from direct artificial disturbances or data inhomogeneities. One of the key innovations in this study is the definition of an RHN-like network consisting of 1204 catchments on a continental scale. The network incorporates existing, well-established RHNs in Canada, the US, the UK, Ireland and Norway, alongside RHN-like catchments from Europe (France, Switzerland, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Spain), which have been incorporated in the network following a major effort to ensure RHN-like status of candidate gauges through consultation with local experts. As the aim of the study is to examine long-term variability in the number of major floods, annual exceedances of 25-, 50-, and 100-year floods during the last 50 - 80 years are estimated for all study gauges across North America and Europe, and for smaller groups of gauges defined by catchment size, location, climate, flood threshold, and period of record. Trends are computed using logistic regression techniques, supported by a suite of methods used to test the assumptions used in the analysis. We also analyse relationships between major flood occurrence and atmosphere/ocean indices (the AMO, NAO, PDO and SOI). Our analysis finds no compelling evidence for consistent changes over time in major-flood occurrence across North America and Europe, indicating that generalizations about major-flood occurrence trends across large domains or a diversity of catchment types are ungrounded. There are in fact more significant relationships between major-flood occurrence and the AMO than between flood occurrence and time. Flood occurrence overall (based on data from all 1204 gauges in our study) increased from 1961 to 2010 but not significantly, driven primarily by European increases. Non-significant increases were also found overall from 1931 to 2010 (322 gauges) but driven primarily by North American increases. Flood occurrence increased and decreased (including some significant changes) for the various sub-groups of gauges. Overall this study demonstrates that past changes in major-flood occurrence are highly complex and future changes will be likewise. International hydrologic networks containing minimally altered catchments will play a key role in understanding these complexities.
author2 US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY AUGUSTA USA
ENVIRONMENT CANADA VANCOUVER CAN
UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO ONTARIO CAN
CENTRE FOR ECOLOGY AND HYDROLOGY WALLINGFORD GBR
IRSTEA LYON UR HHLY FRA
UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG DEU
NORWEGIAN WATER RESOURCES AND ENERGY DIRECTORATE OSLO NOR
DHI HORSHOLM DNK
TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MADRID ESP
FINNISH ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTE HELSINKI FIN
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND MAYNOOTH IRL
ICELANDIC METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE REYKJAVIK ISL
format Other/Unknown Material
author Hodgkins, G.A
Whitfield, P.H.
Burn, D.H.
Hannaford, J.
Renard, B.
Stahl, K.
Fleig, A.K.
Madsen, H.
Mediero, L.
Korhonen, J.
Murphy, C.
Crochet, P.
Wilson, D.
author_facet Hodgkins, G.A
Whitfield, P.H.
Burn, D.H.
Hannaford, J.
Renard, B.
Stahl, K.
Fleig, A.K.
Madsen, H.
Mediero, L.
Korhonen, J.
Murphy, C.
Crochet, P.
Wilson, D.
author_sort Hodgkins, G.A
title Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe
title_short Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe
title_full Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe
title_fullStr Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe
title_full_unstemmed Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe
title_sort climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across north america and europe
publishDate 2016
url https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00052220
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EUROPE
long_lat ENVELOPE(30.704,30.704,66.481,66.481)
geographic Canada
Norway
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geographic_facet Canada
Norway
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genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source 46620
op_relation https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00052220
op_rights Date de dépôt: 2017-01-13 - Tous les documents et informations contenus dans la base CemOA Publications sont protégés en vertu du droit de propriété intellectuelle, en particulier par le droit d'auteur. La personne consultant la base CemOA Publications peut visualiser, reproduire, ou stocker des copies des publications, à condition que l'information soit seulement pour son usage personnel et non commercial. L'utilisation des travaux universitaires est soumise à autorisation préalable de leurs auteurs. Toute information relative au signalement d'une publication contenue dans CemOA Publications doit inclure la citation bibliographique usuelle : Nom du ou des auteurs, titre et source du document, date et URL de la notice (dc_identifier).
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spelling ftcemoa:oai:irsteadoc.irstea.fr:PUB00052220 2023-05-15T16:53:18+02:00 Climate-driven trends in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe Hodgkins, G.A Whitfield, P.H. Burn, D.H. Hannaford, J. Renard, B. Stahl, K. Fleig, A.K. Madsen, H. Mediero, L. Korhonen, J. Murphy, C. Crochet, P. Wilson, D. US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY AUGUSTA USA ENVIRONMENT CANADA VANCOUVER CAN UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO ONTARIO CAN CENTRE FOR ECOLOGY AND HYDROLOGY WALLINGFORD GBR IRSTEA LYON UR HHLY FRA UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG DEU NORWEGIAN WATER RESOURCES AND ENERGY DIRECTORATE OSLO NOR DHI HORSHOLM DNK TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MADRID ESP FINNISH ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTE HELSINKI FIN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND MAYNOOTH IRL ICELANDIC METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE REYKJAVIK ISL AMERIQUE DU NORD EUROPE 2016 application/pdf https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00052220 Anglais eng https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00052220 Date de dépôt: 2017-01-13 - Tous les documents et informations contenus dans la base CemOA Publications sont protégés en vertu du droit de propriété intellectuelle, en particulier par le droit d'auteur. La personne consultant la base CemOA Publications peut visualiser, reproduire, ou stocker des copies des publications, à condition que l'information soit seulement pour son usage personnel et non commercial. L'utilisation des travaux universitaires est soumise à autorisation préalable de leurs auteurs. Toute information relative au signalement d'une publication contenue dans CemOA Publications doit inclure la citation bibliographique usuelle : Nom du ou des auteurs, titre et source du document, date et URL de la notice (dc_identifier). 46620 INONDATION TENDANCE CLIMAT flooding trends climate Communication scientifique sans actes 2016 ftcemoa 2021-06-29T11:40:39Z Every year river floods cause enormous damage around the world. Recent major floods in North America and Europe, for example, have received much press, with some concluding that these floods are more frequent in recent years as a result of anthropogenic warming. There has been considerable scientific effort invested in establishing whether observed flood records show evidence of trends or variability in flood frequency, and to determine whether these patterns can be linked to climatic changes. However, the river catchments used in many published studies are influenced by direct human alteration such as reservoir regulation and urbanisation, which can confound the interpretation of climate-driven variability. Furthermore, a majority of previous studies have analysed changes in low magnitude floods, such as the annual peak flow, at a national scale. Few studies are known that have analysed changes in large floods (greater than 25-year floods) on a continental scale. To fill this research gap, we present a study analysing flood flows from reference hydrologic networks (RHNs) or RHN-like gauges across a large study domain embracing North America and much of Europe. RHNs comprise gauging stations with minimally disturbed catchment conditions, which have a near-natural flow regime and provide good quality data; RHN analyses thus allow hydro-climatic variability to be distinguished from direct artificial disturbances or data inhomogeneities. One of the key innovations in this study is the definition of an RHN-like network consisting of 1204 catchments on a continental scale. The network incorporates existing, well-established RHNs in Canada, the US, the UK, Ireland and Norway, alongside RHN-like catchments from Europe (France, Switzerland, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Spain), which have been incorporated in the network following a major effort to ensure RHN-like status of candidate gauges through consultation with local experts. As the aim of the study is to examine long-term variability in the number of major floods, annual exceedances of 25-, 50-, and 100-year floods during the last 50 - 80 years are estimated for all study gauges across North America and Europe, and for smaller groups of gauges defined by catchment size, location, climate, flood threshold, and period of record. Trends are computed using logistic regression techniques, supported by a suite of methods used to test the assumptions used in the analysis. We also analyse relationships between major flood occurrence and atmosphere/ocean indices (the AMO, NAO, PDO and SOI). Our analysis finds no compelling evidence for consistent changes over time in major-flood occurrence across North America and Europe, indicating that generalizations about major-flood occurrence trends across large domains or a diversity of catchment types are ungrounded. There are in fact more significant relationships between major-flood occurrence and the AMO than between flood occurrence and time. Flood occurrence overall (based on data from all 1204 gauges in our study) increased from 1961 to 2010 but not significantly, driven primarily by European increases. Non-significant increases were also found overall from 1931 to 2010 (322 gauges) but driven primarily by North American increases. Flood occurrence increased and decreased (including some significant changes) for the various sub-groups of gauges. Overall this study demonstrates that past changes in major-flood occurrence are highly complex and future changes will be likewise. International hydrologic networks containing minimally altered catchments will play a key role in understanding these complexities. Other/Unknown Material Iceland Irstea Publications et Bases documentaires (Irstea@doc/CemOA) Canada Norway Soi ENVELOPE(30.704,30.704,66.481,66.481)